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The phrase "a start on a" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the beginning of a process, project, or task.
Example: "This workshop will give you a start on a new career path in digital marketing."
Alternatives: "an introduction to a" or "a beginning in a".
Exact(7)
Mr. Bloomberg and his planners have made a start on a worthy, complicated project.
So I've made a start on a list of things that swimmers might like for Christmas.
"So how much of a start on a court remedy would be accommodated within the Regents' figure?" he said.
Continuing education is a multiheaded beast that embraces leisurely retirees and anxious laid-off workers hoping to get a start on a new career, those seeking credit or certification and those indifferent to further credentials.
"When you get white hair people patronise you, treat you as if you are a congenital idiot, start calling you we," rails the 82-year-old actor Dudley Sutton before sipping his Red Bull and making a start on a packet of digestives.
Yet, the items mentioned above should have served to initiate a start on a more holistic debate on a future with fully automated vehicles and their implications in a larger context, i.e. in the system of automobility.
Similar(53)
On July 10, I wish to make a start on creating such a country," she said.
That would be a breakthrough but only a start on the road to recovery.
Nato is planning to make a start on just such a move at a Nato summit in Warsaw in July.
In July, Hansen began with a start on July 2, and ended with a win on July 31.
"I've got a head start on quite a few people.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com